Links and documents

Construction Date(s)

Listed on the Canadian Register:
2008/01/04

Statement of Significance

Description of Historic Place

Located at 2 Wilson Street West at the intersection of Wilson and Foster Streets, the Perkins building is a two-storey post WWII structure built in 1946-1947.

The Perkins Building has been recognized for its heritage value by the Town of Perth on 12 February 2002, By-law 3424.

Heritage Value

The Perkins Building reflects an interesting period in the Municipality's history, when all were looking optimistically to the future, after World War Two. Straying away from traditional architectural styles, the Perkins building embraced the Art Moderne design reflected in the works of architects such as Walter Gropius and his Bauhaus school and Le Corbusier.

Designed by A.L. Radbourne in consultation with Joe Perkins, the building featured the popular streamline trend in modern styles of the era, which pervaded not only architecturally, but in art, fashion, interior design, and most importantly, automotive design. The concept of an automotive dealership was relatively new to Ontario towns like Perth during the 1940s, and the Perkins Building epitomizes the interesting shift away from the traditional architectural forms pervasive in Perth up to this point.

The Perkins Building replaced three properties, including a stone building on the site which originally housed the automotive dealership. In an effort to appeal to both town and country clientele, Joe Perkins combined the International Harvester and General Motors dealerships at the site as well as a bowling alley. The newly constructed building contained a show room on the ground floor large enough to display three cars, as well as two service bays separated from the showroom by a low curved divider. The rear portion of the second floor housed Perkins Bowling Lanes, which was Perth's first indoor eight-lane bowling alley. The remainder of the second floor has traditionally served as office space.

In 1991, the gasoline station elements of the building were removed including the prominent Texaco sign (the building housed various gasoline suppliers over the years) and fuel pumps. In 1994, John Stewart, a prominent local heritage entrepreneur, purchased and converted the building into a commercial shopping centre named "Perks N' Things," while maintaining much of the building's architectural integrity.